Why ADHD Is Not A Psychiatric Disorder Or Brain Disease

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2020
  • The rates of attention deficit disorder (ADD), today referred to as attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), have skyrocketed in recent years. But what is ADHD? ADHD is just a name we give to people who share a collection of symptoms: They can’t focus or pay attention, they’re inattentive, and they are hyperactive. These are symptoms. So, what are the causes?
    In this episode, Dr. Hyman sits down with Dr. George Papaicolaou to discuss the common drivers of ADHD, and why it is so important to identify and treat its causes, rather than its symptoms. They also share specific cases in which they have treated patients for ADHD.
    George Papanicolaou is a graduate of the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine and is Board Certified in Family Medicine from Abington Memorial Hospital. He is also an Institute for Functional Medicine Practitioner. Upon graduation from his residency he joined the Indian Health Service. He worked on the Navajo reservation for 4 years at the Chinle Comprehensive Medical Facility where he served as the Outpatient Department Coordinator. In 2000, he founded Cornerstone Family Practice in Rowley, MA. He practiced with a philosophy centered on personal relationships and treating the whole person, not just not the disease. He called that philosophy “Whole Life Wellness”. Over time as the healthcare system made it harder for patients to receive this kind of personal care Dr. Papanicolaou decided a change was needed. He began training in Functional Medicine through the Institute of Functional Medicine. In 2015, he established Cornerstone Personal Health - a practice dedicated entirely to Functional Medicine. Dr. Papanicolaou to join The UltraWellness Center in 2017.
    This episode is sponsored by Paleovalley and Farmacy.
    Right now, Paleovalley is offering my listener's 15% off your entire first order. Just go to paleovalley.com/hyman to check out all their clean Paleo products and take advantage of this deal.
    The Pegan Shake features a combination of collagen, pumpkin, and pea protein with healthy fats from my two favorites: MCT oil which is great for fat burning and brain power as well as avocado oil. I’ve also included acacia fiber to help with gut motility and digestion. Check it out at getfarmacy.com
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @PaulKentSkates
    @PaulKentSkates Год назад +614

    First let me start by saying, I fully agree that nutrition and the microbiome is important. But the root cause of ADHD is an issue with the development of the brain in fetuses or in very young children. Something that causes an increase of dopamine transporters. This can happen from various environmental reasons, genetics or a combination of these factors. I believe I saw that around 70% of cases have a genetic component at least partially responsible.
    There is a physical difference in the brains of people with ADHD regardless of the initial cause or trauma. We are never going to remodel those brains with a healthier diet. It has been researched ad nauseam and it has been disproven time and time again. Yes, exercise, and developing a better microbiome is going to help, I have been doing that for 20 years. These were major focuses of mine during my athletic career. But they will not balance out the brain chemistry. Because ADHD is not an imbalance of the free floating chemicals in the brain. ADHD is caused by the excess dopamine transporters. These transporters remove the dopamine from the brain cells too quickly, before it has had a chance to act. This is why increasing tonic levels of dopamine helps to make people function. It allows a normal amount of dopamine to be present in the neurons at a given moment. There are also other non stimulant meds that can plug these transporters by inhibiting reuptake. (Almost like plugging the holes). And Alpha agonist meds too (which are admittedly a little more complicated and I forget how they work again. I think it slows the release of other chemicals (reuptake) by stimulating the a2 receptors.
    Lastly, you need to be careful associating ADHD with screen time on social media. Yes social media can be a trap for those with ADHD, but it does not push anyone over into the disorder. Video games actually help with increasing working memory in people with ADHD.
    Frankly this type of information is exactly why I didn't achieve more. I did extremely well with my ADHD (diagnosed in the 90's and again recently) I was unmedicated for 40 years. But I have always known I was failing at my potential. I had my career, but others who had the same career have been able to use it to buy homes. Because I couldn't organize myself enough to capitalize on opportunities that came up due to my hard work in other areas. I would be your success story hearing healthy eating in ways that are very similar to the hyman diet (I came across this in my own research and ideology on food) exercise, I quit video games and television because I realized they captivate my attention. No drugs or alcohol. And this did help. I would increase my sensitivity to dopamine. But it was never enough to make reading books anything but a constant struggle. Something I did often, through brute force. My advantage was that I knew enough to be a high level coach when I couldn't afford a coach. (research was paramount). Quite often it left me run down. I was told my issues in work, school or at home were a moral failing. I couldn't listen to people no matter how much I wanted to and I left people thinking I didn't care when I did. I would interupt because I couldn't reliably remember what I needed to say if I waited for the other person to finish. Etc.
    I did everything the anti med people think is right, and honestly it helped me be a better athlete, but I don't think it made living in this society easier and I dropped so many balls. The only times I ever felt I was in control was when I took a bronchodilator that contained ephedrine (in my mid 30's). Which in turn made me consider revisiting medication. It still took me 5 years to get around to it with everything I was dealing with. I began to use vyvanse and I can finally work for myself (trust myself to work on my own business without needing someone to manage me). I wish I would have been more open to it sooner.
    7 percent of youth have ADHD for one reason or another. Genetics, premature birth, strep that was bad enough that the immune system damaged the brain due to certain numerous having the protein that strep has, malnutrition, etc. But only 3-4% are medicated. Which to me means that we are undermedicating youth. The brain is injured during development. There is no legitimate debate about that.
    I feel this video takes one step forward in the attempt to destigmatize ADHD while taking one or two backwards by trivializing it. This is a serious concern as it unloads the responsibility on our children and the parents and makes the feel responsible for the failures and it also sets them up to fail.
    It's great you have success with the high functioning cases, with people like me. But it is a survivor bias. As most of us end up only being able to keep jobs where we almost live at work full time in mines or the oilfeilds, or doing construction.
    Now as a father I do not want my son (also with pretty severe ADHD) to have to experience the feeling of failure that has been a constant theme of my life (even during my success). I have achieved some really awesome things, but I struggle to follow through to make my achievements actual benefit my future. I am going to try to the best of my ability help set him up to avoid these pitfalls. That has included diet, activity, controlled screen time, holistic health, but it also includes mild medication. Because the evidence is clear. ADHD is a neurological situation that is influenced by the body, not caused by it.

    • @PaulKentSkates
      @PaulKentSkates Год назад +24

      @@svetavinogradova4243 This is such a good troll. Take your upvote.

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 Год назад

      @@PaulKentSkates This loooooooooong sheet demonstrates that you have a compulsive attention, waaaaaaay too good for ADHD.
      Your teachers werer right.
      Certain traditions in the family consistently raise disorganised, thicky children. who grow dumb ( dyslexic is the term for dumb, there is no illness) . There are NO differences in the brain, NO.

    • @rheet
      @rheet Год назад +21

      Hey, I have been daydreaming since a child - mostly good ones, but replaced by anxious thoughts like OCD later in my teenage years. I have been always tired too… I hate exercise and lack physical energy (full of mental energy that goes to anxious thoughts and other fun things). I find hard to motivate myself to do productive activities… unfortunately, my interests have been anime, games and fun novels since early childhood. Have you heard of a ADHD case like me?
      I feel exhausted all the time unless I take concerta (stimulant) :/

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 Год назад

      @@rheet Vitamin D deficiency and addiction to games. Exclude all computers and internet from your life. Your parents spoiled you.

    • @justdrewit2219
      @justdrewit2219 Год назад +93

      Well freaking said. Near the beginning when the one guy says something like "I have a little bit of ADHD sometimes myself" I immediately knew this was going to go downhill quick. And sure enough, this is basically an infomercial for the one guy to sell his book... going out of his way to announce the title every 3 minutes
      Interesting story of yours; mine went down a much darker path.

  • @ewetubin1
    @ewetubin1 Год назад +82

    It's not the label that's bad! It's the way people VIEW the label that can be good or bad. Labels are needed, for communication purposes. We need to stop calling labels bad and teach people to instead stop viewing things negatively. And instead see a label as a way to understand things. I for one am glad for the label. When I found out at age 34, I started telling important people in my life. Even when I went to a job interview aaaand it helped! I still got hired and the boss understood that I took longer to learn but when I did I was a great asset to the business. One of the best workers he ever had.

    • @ch________6629
      @ch________6629 11 месяцев назад +1

      The label made me want to kill myself. I know people who wanted to kill themselves because of a label. Here's the hard truth: It doesn't matter whether it's treated positively or negatively, because the real problem is you will be treated _differently_. It might not be "incompetent" or "slow-witted" or some other negative adjective, but it will be different. It's always been about pigeonholing people, separating one group from another, no matter how superficial that line actually is. It's about slapping a diagnosis on a perfectly health person so the pharmaceutical companies can sell you pills that fuck with your brain chemistry and make a quick buck doing so. They put that shit on your medical record which, by the way, cannot be removed. You're stuck with it. *FOR LIFE* And you can't escape from it, or at least you could if it weren't for people like you.
      I don't WANT to be seen as different. I don't WANT to be stuck with something I have no control over, that more and more people are using like a horoscope to define their entire personality, by people who want to use me like some dress-up doll of theirs to define as they see fit. I want to decide who I am, not people like them, and not people like you. Can you imagine if every person born in April was treated like they had to be watched constantly or they'd wander off into traffic like they had some kind of spontaneous "run out into traffic and get hit by a car" disease? All because they were born in April??? Fuck you and your _labels_!
      The labels ARE bad. And I hope they always WILL BE bad. The only thing stopping me from putting a gun to my forehead is the comfort that maybe someday I can rid myself of it and finally be normal, and I can't do that when ignorant muppets like you have the podium to the current zeitgeist, preaching your faux ""acceptance"" like you're not some shill for big pharma to sell people more $50 prescription pill bottles, and looking out with hawk eyes to see who among the crowd is acting "awkward" or "distracted" so you can point and gawk while in the same breath regurgitate your dogma of neo inclusivity. "Oh he must have been hurt by bigots in the past!" No, I was hurt by people like YOU! People who want to slap a label on every damn personality trait in the wind and call it a "disorder". Oh, I'm sorry, you're calling it "neurodivergence" now, because disorder means there's something _bad_ with it! Fuck you! Neurodivergence is just a dog whistle for "retard" and you know it! It's to let other people know that person over there needs to be treated like a fucking child because tHAts wHAt tHe PaPeR FRom thE DOCTor SaYS.
      I would rather die than live with a scarlet letter strapped to my chest like your supposed utopia where "lABeLs aREn'T bAd" for the rest of my life. I would rather have ablism make a comeback than live in that kind of world. You people are no different than the nut houses of the early 20th century that cut people's brains open for being "free spirited" Got to hell!

    • @mirandafriske4525
      @mirandafriske4525 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@ch________6629 The label doesn't change your condition. If you have ADHD, you're going to have it whether you label it or not. The label just helps others understand why you're different. For many it's a relief because now they know they're not alone in their differences and that their struggles are validated. After a diagnoses, there is medication that can be taken to help with the inconveniences of having ADHD. People don't treat you any differently because you have ADHD (generally), it just helps some people understand that your mishaps aren't exactly your fault. I was diagnosed at 32, it's a hell of a condition. Very debilitating, but the label didn't change anything at all, except now I can get medication to help with it.

    • @carolejackson8357
      @carolejackson8357 11 месяцев назад

      Great.

    • @judithdarida6998
      @judithdarida6998 11 месяцев назад

      😊😊😊yes!

    • @lisatutler-jones5992
      @lisatutler-jones5992 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@ch________6629The label is heartbreaking for me which is why I never followed through with treatment. I don't see the benefit of sharing the label/dx with anyone (including my very compassionate and caring manager) because they just don't understand!!

  • @rebeccaalam9261
    @rebeccaalam9261 3 года назад +593

    My life was in complete shambles before I was diagnosed with ADHD. Even though I'm not a fan of labels either and don't think there is one size fits all diagnosis, without the label I wouldn't have been able to get the help I needed and get to the root of the problem.

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 3 года назад +16

      And what help have you got?

    • @rid.h.tom.4296
      @rid.h.tom.4296 3 года назад +13

      I am on the same spot right now. How has your experience been so far?

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 3 года назад +36

      @@rid.h.tom.4296 Nothing will help except realising that you need to work on yourself and your habits.

    • @hybridxg2204
      @hybridxg2204 2 года назад +13

      Yea, I think I remember a podcast I was listening to, it’s not just in your head, was talking about a model in the EU, probably uk, that was about using labels only to help the patient get what they needed to solve their problems.

    • @journeymann
      @journeymann 2 года назад +43

      Well put Rebecca. It gives you a target to aim for. A way to make a plan. Otherwise you are just flailing & failing trying anything & everything without any real success.

  • @VeritasElysium931
    @VeritasElysium931 Год назад +537

    I just turned 50 and was recently diagnosed with ADHD/Inattentive Type. I have strong roots in approaching physical and mental health issues from a naturalistic standpoint. My grandmother ran a colonic therapy clinic in the 1980s. She even introduced me to Kombucha tea in 1990. She was a woman ahead of her time and because of her, I followed everything natural throughout the years. I wholeheartedly believe there are natural ways to heal the body.
    With that said, I also believe there is a time and place for medication. For years I had to work so much harder than everyone else. I recently started taking medication and I feel like someone turned on the lights. For me, the lack of focus was more like my brain was unable to fully access the information I knew. This presented as the inability to “catch” or bring the knowledge I had learned to memory. So I would hear things I knew and read or studied, ad nausea, but when I went to write about it would take me hours to write my thoughts on paper. I would struggle, greatly!! However after taking medication, it was life changing!!! I was able to easily think and write my ideas out. I wasn't overwhelmed by tasks I needed to do. I could set my intentions to start a project and finish it. When writing, I would have so many thoughts going on in my head all at once and with the medication, I could stick with an idea. This is what “inattentiveness” felt like for me. It wasn't that I had a short attention span. It's about having a very active mind that I could not control.
    Let's be careful to not undermine the legitimacy of this condition. Yes, exercise, nutrition and incorporating other behavioral strategies are important. But medication at the right dose can effectively augment treatment and make a world of difference for someone who has ADHD.

    • @AForEh
      @AForEh Год назад

      Thank you for saying this! It’s not a versus battle between the 2! So many ADHD’ers have fallen for the fear mongering and are sentenced to a life of mediocrity, chasing magic pills, naturopaths, chiros, herbal medicine, Chinese doctors etc. it’s fine to supplement with those, but to deprive oneself from effective medication is ignoring the elephant in the room. And even if someone is really scared of it, look at it as a bridging solution. Bridge yourself with medication until you find the natural solution, and then you can go off. But in case you can’t find that solution, you won’t be left stranded.

    • @thedolcetto81
      @thedolcetto81 Год назад +48

      Oh my god Elise! Thank you for your comment. I so recognised myself in what you wrote. Thanks for putting this into words.

    • @leo.nordmann
      @leo.nordmann Год назад +47

      My mother is also into all natural treatments and was strictly against medication for mostly anything. So there was talk about adhd and me possibly having it, but since my mother denied that it even exists and I even went to a school that is pretty esoteric so people just were mostly on that "natural" vibe if that makes sense. Well that could have been fine but instead of helping me with my problems of staying attentive in school I was just ridiculed and quickly learned that the only fun I can have is by being the class clown. Never really had many friends in school that I kept for a longer period too. So I carried this thought with me until now that adhd doesn't really exist and I just have to work on myself and meditate, eat healthy etc. Well I did that for some time after school kind of successfully but then covid hit and I now realize that with covid all my coping mechanisms were gone from one day to the other and I was forced to stay at home which made me just stay infront of the pc all day....
      Yesterday I heard someone explain adhd and for the first time I thought "yea that must be it" I'm quite disillusioned now, it's like my whole life has been turned upside down. I'm kind of hopeful again to find a solution to my problems, but at the same time I feel more alone and left on my own realizing that maybe thing could have turned out way different if not for a few variables in my childhood. Thanks for sharing your experience here Elise!

    • @leo.nordmann
      @leo.nordmann Год назад +45

      Somebody else wrote that they felt like their mind shifted from "I am the problem" to "I have a problem" and I can very much relate to that rn.

    • @BelindaTN
      @BelindaTN Год назад +23

      Elise, can you tell us what medication helped you? And thank you for sharing your testimony.

  • @coryflores4964
    @coryflores4964 5 месяцев назад +201

    Psilocybin mushrooms have been found to have great effects and could benefit those with depression and anxiety, but there's a big risk if you eat the wrong one

    • @Joe-bh7pf
      @Joe-bh7pf 5 месяцев назад +4

      Taking shrooms was 100% one of the most important experiences in my life. Everything has changed since my trip - I perceive - things differently.

    • @deereed1627
      @deereed1627 5 месяцев назад +2

      Psilocybin mushroom revived me from years of uncontrollable depression, anxiety and illicit pill addiction. Imagine carrying heavy chains for over a decade and then all of a sudden that burden is gone, Believe it or not in a couple years they'll be all over for treatment of mental health related issues,

    • @snuffdog2945
      @snuffdog2945 5 месяцев назад

      Been looking to try shrooms
      how do you get yours ?

    • @snuffdog2945
      @snuffdog2945 5 месяцев назад

      How do I get him up please?

    • @nicolereed578
      @nicolereed578 5 месяцев назад

      Bless your souls. After all, I found that the only thing that we need is nature and love.

  • @germainperez7114
    @germainperez7114 2 года назад +50

    I have ADHD and this talk might be good, but I couldn't listen to more than 10min because the host is insufferable. "You don't have a problem, just exercise! Eat right! Buy my book!"

    • @waffle_chair9269
      @waffle_chair9269 7 месяцев назад +5

      If you don’t listen, and weed out nonsense, you may miss golden nuggets of info, that can then spur you to pivot in your own research and find new avenues for you to personally look at. Just don’t judge, listen to see if anything is there you can use, don’t worry about what they are selling etc. it’s all just learning. But no listening, can narrow your options and inspiration.
      But I know what yiu mean, it’s annoying have to wade through so much irrelevant stuff, to get answers, but at end of the day it’s free.
      Just listened to a great talk with James Nestor who talks about breath work, and explains how it connects. Yea he has a book, but he’s a journalist, so he’s just reporting some of the astounding research he came across, and used for himself,so was quite interesting. 😊

    • @msabo31
      @msabo31 7 месяцев назад +9

      As a dietitian, who’s selling nothing, not even my services, I can tell you that the diet and exercise accounts for most illnesses and conditions regardless of what’s in our water, our air, our food. Our lean muscle mass is more involved with our immunity &circulation, which affects blood flow to the brain, body, nutrient distribution, serotonin regulation, and much more. Outside exercise especially does so much healing for the brain and body. We are meant to be in nature as much as possible instead of our boxes we live inside called our office and home. This is important regardless of body weight. I learned so much of the statistics and data that our government already knows during my dietetics training, that was a conventional training not even a more holistic approach. yet doctors aren’t trained in hardly any of the food and nutrition science beyond foods caloric value. Even a gastroenterologist, who’s field is focusing solely on the digestive tract doesn’t ask you much about diet. Scratch my head, I’ve been to many GI doctors. The host has been spouting the advice that turned you off for decades and has healed many many folks, and while I’m not one his biggest fans, my own scientific research and training has brought me to begrudgingly acknowledge he’s not wrong. You might consider what about him starting the talk with diet and exercise turned you off so much. He’s selling books which cost 20 or 30 dollars that are designed to empower you & again I’m not a fan, I don’t buy his books anymore, but I check in now and then to see where his guidance is going. But he does have useful talks and credible guests on his free show. Far better than the $200 doctor appt covered mostly by insurance pushing us to take drugs.

    • @loveiswhatmattersmost7572
      @loveiswhatmattersmost7572 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@msabo31Actually you're incorrect. Most diseases and issues are caused by demonic energy but convincing someone who doesn't know the truth is a complete waste of time.

    • @Kamseherthepoet
      @Kamseherthepoet 7 месяцев назад

      Yes! With no details! What are the right assignments and assessments for this?

    • @HighVibeCat
      @HighVibeCat 7 месяцев назад +3

      My attn span is especially helped by 2x-ing the speed of the talk and limiting my time to learn.
      The info is rich, so just bring it up to speed with your speed-racer mind. YT Red is with every cent imo for the purposes of working with my mind. Sometimes I change the speed, and it engages my mind in a new way.
      If you don’t want to listen to it:
      assessing function of mthfr & cmt genes are important.
      At very little cost, start taking chlorella tablets a few times per day to detox metals
      There are other ways to detox metals, but this one is relatively cheap and mild
      I found minerals were important to look at, personally.
      There’s no short list, bc every body is different.
      Reducing food dyes, additives, colors & corn syrup is very helpful.
      Self-test for food allergies, and be honest with yourself by way of journaling results.
      Gut micro biome is it’s own whole field of medicine, so this is a cliffs notes version
      😻

  • @ErutaniaRose
    @ErutaniaRose 3 года назад +228

    I have ADHD and I can say with certainty that the environment is REALLY important. School was a huge no, no, for me unless it was metalworking or some other class where I could actually be creative and move around.

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 2 года назад +15

      Some people should work in manual labour, indeed.

    • @florencelovme
      @florencelovme 2 года назад +15

      @@svetavinogradova4243 The only Job I managed to do Is at Burger King because It helps calm down my nervous system to do a repetItIve task for hours
      Any other Job I couldn't keep cus I can't follow InstuctIons and multItaskIng Is confusIng

    • @ErutaniaRose
      @ErutaniaRose 2 года назад +26

      @@florencelovme For me, it's the opposite. My mind is always racing, (inattentive) so I need to be able to express that without being tied down to a chair. If I choose to sit, fine, but I need to be able to get up without getting yelled at, or vise versa. I also just REALLY need to be in control. I can't take being micromanaged, and if someone does it I straight up need them to not.
      I need something with constant change or I get so bored I do nothing, I need to be able to ask questions without getting punished. I need to be treated like a PERSON. But, that's just for me personally.
      Edit: Though I do need to sit too, since I got some disabilities that leave me not being able to stand in one place too long. So I def work best with a balance. Also dang, it's been two years, lol.

    • @ErutaniaRose
      @ErutaniaRose 2 года назад +8

      @@svetavinogradova4243 I suppose, but I need to have autonomy and ZERO micromanagement. Yes, I need help and to work in a team, but I cannot stand being talked down to because people always tell me to, "Suck it up" or "Just do it" which just makes me wanna throw something out window. So, anything with collaboration, group effort, and division of work would be best for me.

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 2 года назад +4

      @@ErutaniaRose Your expectations do not match your abilities. You need to lower your requirements to the low level of your abilities. Or - up your skills to the level of your expectations from others.

  • @Geeloveesu
    @Geeloveesu 3 года назад +222

    The story of Dr Mark Hyman’s patient makes me so emotional. This boy became an astrophysicist because he found the right help. So many kids with so much potential end up with their lives ruined because they’re a victim of today’s crappy society. This info should be shared more and it should be the way we all live our lives. Our kids are suffering and it’s not their fault!

    • @smooth_pursuit
      @smooth_pursuit 2 года назад +31

      My ADHD brother found his passion early and it took him to Olympic gold. I’ve had a life of serial passions, unstarted & unfinished projects, and my life has been more like a car without a driver, despite a very high IQ 😞

    • @Charlie-eq3dj
      @Charlie-eq3dj 2 года назад +3

      @@smooth_pursuit Hi Susan. Did you have a physical outlet like your brother did?

    • @smooth_pursuit
      @smooth_pursuit 2 года назад +8

      @@Charlie-eq3dj yes I did sports too and it was really good for me, I couldn’t focus well enough when racing though and give 100% so I didn’t really excel. On the other hand I also discovered yoga very early, and that was the thing where I really could focus. And after/ alongside a couple of other careers, I came back to teaching yoga, and that’s what I’ve been doing for the last 17 years. Thanks for asking 🙂
      PS if I’d understood the problem before a couple of years ago, that would’ve helped 😉

    • @Charlie-eq3dj
      @Charlie-eq3dj 2 года назад +4

      @@smooth_pursuit Thanks for the reply. 'm also trying to get my mind under control. Interestingly enough, I also picked up Yoga a few years ago and it has improved my life greatly. I may also consider taking a TTC class in the future. Thanks again!

    • @smooth_pursuit
      @smooth_pursuit 2 года назад +1

      @@Charlie-eq3dj that’s cool! Yoga is a life saver!! Good luck :)

  • @DummyFace123
    @DummyFace123 2 года назад +152

    The crux of the problem with ADHD is everyone thinks taking stimulants is cheating/shameful and that you just want to get high, even the psychiatrists. I’ve stopped being nice about it

    • @journeymann
      @journeymann 2 года назад +61

      Well said. It’s like saying to a diabetic that Insulin might become Addictive.

    • @franovak2654
      @franovak2654 Год назад

      ​@@journeymann it's not. It's not a disease. It is socially disabilitated.

    • @carolejackson8357
      @carolejackson8357 Год назад +7

      In my case drugs have been recommended. I chose to use diet and exercise. I found a natural high on so many levels including management of ADD.
      Only recently have I seen science catching up to stop pushing drugs for every. If you have had medical care practitioners recommending lifestyle changes first, they are dedicated to trearing the whole body vs one condition with drugs that come with secondary side effects.

    • @ashleyspiano
      @ashleyspiano Год назад +6

      One issue with stimulants is that parents who turn to them think they're the only answer, focusing on the dose while their child is simply just suffering with celiac disease or some other important factor. Stimulants are okay as long as they don't cause you to neglect a root issue.

    • @ellensands8938
      @ellensands8938 Год назад +8

      100 percent right. We can use it and not abuse it for Christ's sake.

  • @benphartine
    @benphartine 2 года назад +60

    10:23 where the identification of the problem starts, the most common drivers. 11:15 he starts explaining the problems begin with environmental influences and how lifestyle and nutrition affects to the gut microbiome 12:18 the list of influences begins.

    • @OrthodoxInquirer
      @OrthodoxInquirer Год назад +2

      Thank you!

    • @Kimpossibility
      @Kimpossibility Год назад +2

      Omg thank you! I was wondering how I was going to pay attention long enough to find answers before asking if someone could just summarize with BLUF and some bullet points of important things with time stamps. 🤦🏻‍♀️

  • @BrownGeorge-pw2xo
    @BrownGeorge-pw2xo 10 месяцев назад +203

    Psychedelics and psilocybin in general are just amazing with so many health benefits. Psilocybin treatment actually saved me from ADHD. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.

    • @laurj09
      @laurj09 10 месяцев назад

      I've been looking to try shrooms, anyone knows where can I acquire some? I will so much appreciate.

    • @gefferystones2814
      @gefferystones2814 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes sure of Dr.benshrooms.

    • @Wimruther-hk4zn
      @Wimruther-hk4zn 10 месяцев назад +2

      Shroom microdosing help me overcome my life long addiction to cigarettes and alcohol.

    • @SusanaGomez-mp8sk
      @SusanaGomez-mp8sk 10 месяцев назад

      Hey, I'm not surprised to see you mention Dr.benshrooms...his products are pure and top quality.

    • @Mcdogmom288
      @Mcdogmom288 10 месяцев назад

      Sure he's dr.benshrooms..one of my best experience was DMT. I can't really explain it but it was great.

  • @lone982
    @lone982 2 года назад +7

    It's great to hear these conversations with both members contributing.

  • @BrandonSL500
    @BrandonSL500 8 месяцев назад +13

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 🧠 ADHD is not just a brain disease; it's a result of genetic, environmental, and lifestyle factors.
    01:22 🌍 ADHD prevalence is rising, affecting both children and adults due to genetic predisposition and environmental triggers.
    02:44 📊 ADHD has been traditionally seen as a medical or behavioral issue, but it's more accurately a body-brain interaction.
    03:42 🧬 ADHD symptoms vary from mild to severe, with genetics and environment playing a role in its manifestation.
    04:53 🏃‍♂️ Modern ADHD culture is exacerbated by constant distractions from digital media and technology.
    05:50 👩‍👦‍👦 ADHD in children often leads to feelings of isolation, frustration, and negative self-identity.
    06:45 🚫 ADHD should not be solely considered a psychiatric disorder; it involves systemic factors that impact the brain.
    08:52 🍎 Dietary factors are crucial, with inflammation, nutrient deficiencies, and food sensitivities affecting ADHD symptoms.
    11:12 💡 Focusing on nutrition, gut health, and addressing inflammation can significantly improve ADHD symptoms.
    13:56 🧪 Testing for genetic predispositions, gut issues, nutrient deficiencies, and toxins can provide valuable insights.
    15:05 🧬 Genetic predisposition interacts with the environment; the focus should be on modifying lifestyle factors.
    16:17 🔬 Leaky gut, inflammation, and imbalanced microbiome impact neurotransmitter production and brain function.
    19:03 📊 Comprehensive testing can uncover deficiencies, dysbiosis, and metabolic issues contributing to ADHD.
    20:27 ⚙️ Addressing mitochondrial dysfunction and toxin exposure are essential aspects of ADHD treatment.
    21:11 🧬 Environmental factors like heavy metals can block energy production in cells, affect neurotransmitter metabolism, and contribute to ADHD symptoms.
    22:22 💡 Genetic variations can impact detoxification pathways, affecting a person's ability to eliminate toxins and heavy metals from the body.
    23:33 🍞 ADHD can have multiple contributing factors including genetics, heavy metals, nutritional deficiencies, gut microbiome imbalances, and more.
    24:14 📋 Comprehensive assessment in functional medicine involves understanding genetic, environmental, and dietary factors to tailor treatment for each individual with ADHD.
    28:26 🧬 Genetic variations in genes like MTHFR and COMT can influence neurotransmitter levels and brain function in individuals with ADHD.
    29:08 🥦 Nutritional deficiencies, especially in B vitamins, can impact neurotransmitter production and brain function in people with ADHD.
    30:19 🦠 Imbalances in gut microbiome and food sensitivities may contribute to inflammation and ADHD symptoms.
    31:45 🛠️ Addressing nutritional deficiencies, improving diet, and reducing inflammation can lead to significant improvements in ADHD symptoms.
    33:07 🌍 ADHD is a spectrum of brain function, and addressing root causes like inflammation and nutritional deficiencies can lead to remarkable improvements.
    34:18 🧠 Brain function can be positively influenced by strategies such as meditation, which can enhance focus, memory, and self-control.
    38:02 🍽️ Elimination diets, nutrient supplementation, and lifestyle changes can transform ADHD symptoms by addressing underlying imbalances.
    39:43 🌟 Functional medicine offers a comprehensive approach to treating ADHD, emphasizing individualized assessments and addressing various contributing factors.
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @charmainekirk1512
    @charmainekirk1512 Год назад +50

    ADHD symptoms can also be indicative of a brain lesion. Please get all children with add adhd symptoms tested with a brain scan....my daughter had a glialblastoma brain tumour which killed her at age 33.
    They figured she had this tumour which was growing pretty slowly since she was very young. Maybe things would have been better for her had it been detected early.

    • @DL-rl9bd
      @DL-rl9bd Год назад +3

      Good and interesting point. My sister’s husband had that brain tumor, and died at age 37. They said it could’ve been growing in there for a very long time. It was inoperable. I say interesting, because he had a learning disability, and could barely read. We believe his mother helped him through school, and hid his learning problems, which may have been due to ADHD, as well.

    • @Alwizcaliteach
      @Alwizcaliteach 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@DL-rl9bd wow, thank you both so much for this information.

    • @judithdarida6998
      @judithdarida6998 11 месяцев назад

      😢soo sad! You’re right! 💟

    • @wendyhannan2454
      @wendyhannan2454 11 месяцев назад

      Thanks for sharing, sorry you lost your daughter. 😔

    • @DivineDestiny77
      @DivineDestiny77 9 месяцев назад +2

      So sorry for your loss.

  • @ADHDGG
    @ADHDGG 2 года назад +34

    If our ADHD brains are structurally different how is that inflammation? I agree that a better diet is an adjunct to ADHD treatment like, good sleep and meditation are. Diet isn’t going to re-structure our brains back to normal, is it? And, maybe for some, because we’re all a bit different, diet will completely treat someone’s ADHD but for others it might simply help improve their ADHD symptoms.

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 Год назад

      No, your brain is ordinary, you simply lack skills

    • @montycora
      @montycora Год назад

      @@svetavinogradova4243 - Oh, really??? Are you a neurologist? Probably not, just some bonehead who knows nothing about neuroscience. ADHD brains are, in fact, different, that is why we are called neuro divergent

    • @GothVibeWars
      @GothVibeWars Год назад +23

      If a diet treats a person’s adhd then they never had adhd in the first place. I changed my diet for the better and exercise and I still experience adhd symptoms. Dr Hyman is very ignorant about the causes of adhd and treating it as something that everyone has a little bit of (which is incorrect) and something that can be fixed with a better diet. He knows a lot about diet and nutrition and maybe he should stick with that. The way he talks about adhd here can actually be harmful dare I say.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад +3

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

    • @debbielondon1809
      @debbielondon1809 24 дня назад

      There is no proof that ADHD brains are structured differently.

  • @KairosDBT
    @KairosDBT 10 месяцев назад +11

    Interesting video. Worth a second viewing. In the meantime, my personal two cents as an adult with ADHD and a therapist:
    1. I started medication at age 30 (I'm now 54), and this has been a positive life changer in unexpected ways for me. Meds are prosthetics, like glasses for aiding poor vision.
    2. My next big help was learning about the underlying neurobiological deficits in executive functions and related strategies to mitigate these.
    3. Exercise/movement and cleaner nutrition are boons to me and are part of improving executive functions.
    4. Mindfulness practices also help.
    5. Treat any/all medical/biological/embodied problems holistically, avoiding the limiting binds of reductionism.

  • @annabackman3028
    @annabackman3028 3 года назад +25

    I've listened to a little bit more than 16 minutes, and not one word about EXERCISE!!!!
    Yes, nutritions are importent, very importent, but so is EXERCISE.
    We were made to move. Walk, run, work physically.
    Not for sit all day at work, ride your car home and spend the evening in front of the TV.
    You can balance your stress level enormously with exercise, your serotonin, adrenaline, endorphines, dopamine, cortisol, and melatonin, all benefits of exercise, cardio exercise. Not running a Marathon, 30-45 minutes fast walking, hard breathing, three-four times a week.
    Just remember, 10 minutes, twice a week is MUCH better than no minute. That's the positive thing with this commitment to yourself.
    If you start in that corner also your insuline will start to help you balance your diet (if you can stay away from suger and other fast carbs for one or two weeks), veggies and protein (not necessarily from animals, that's up to every each person.) will be natural.
    There's just ONE major problem with this.
    As having ADHD I know too well how easy it is to say, to make plans, to decide. And how awfully difficult it is to follow through.
    On the other side, the nutrition program isn't easier to keep. I know that it can be seductively interesting to dive down into all inflammatory contra non-inflammatory stuff, which vitamine is good for this and that.
    But more difficult to stick with in the long run.
    Start with exercise, slow carbs and try to focus on these two things. Food will follow as your body, and brain, will tell you some, and you will feel better, think better and THAT is the moment for looking deeper in the huge lake of nutritions and theories.
    Been there, done that.
    Back to basics.
    I'm not miraculously "cured" 😂, but daily life works so much better. Especially my ability to handle stress, both external and the classic adult ADHD internal stress, the latter is much better.
    I don't think I am a unique person, we all have basically the same brains and bodies, the same hormone systems as humans had 10 000 years ago. Give that a chance to do what you were designed to. ❤️

    • @dag-nabbit
      @dag-nabbit 3 года назад +2

      The guest speaker mentioned it with the later diagnosis in life. In their 40s, n ot eating well, not exercising. About 10 minutes in.

  • @spiritualspartan884
    @spiritualspartan884 11 месяцев назад +3

    I thoroughly enjoyed and appreciate this episode ❤ thank you for doing what you do!

  • @user-iu1pk6tk5g
    @user-iu1pk6tk5g 3 года назад +2

    FANTASTIC! I am so grateful to learn all those things thank you Mr. Mark and Mr. George

  • @iainjinette9686
    @iainjinette9686 3 года назад +10

    It can take years research and realisation to what is presented here in 41min.. Wow! Thank you!!!

  • @francesgaia4649
    @francesgaia4649 3 года назад +85

    ADHD stands for -
    Attention, Dialed into a Higher
    Dimension.

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 3 года назад

      Simpler: Arrogant Dull Hateful Dude

    • @luisfernandotapia451
      @luisfernandotapia451 2 года назад +7

      No. It's a horrible condition to have.

    • @Abolitionista
      @Abolitionista Год назад

      Neurodivergent people are the ones that are going to change the world for the better.

    • @TruthIsNot4Sale
      @TruthIsNot4Sale Год назад

      Yah definitely not the ppl I know who have it

    • @Abolitionista
      @Abolitionista Год назад

      @@TruthIsNot4Sale how would you know if you're not on that dimension with them?

  • @shelleycharlesworth5177
    @shelleycharlesworth5177 Год назад +14

    I think this is great info. Thanks ! I guess that my partner has ADHD and RSD. He is 61. He lacks time management, loses things, procrastinates, over thinks, over talks and is a perfectionist. But he is not hyperactive. Doesn’t fidget. Can blurt out things & interrupt often but CAN often be a good listener. He CAN focus and he isn’t
    distracted once on task. He is overly sensitive-gets his feelings hurt so easily.

    • @suziethompson9513
      @suziethompson9513 Год назад +3

      I myself am quite similar. The RSD is the worst of all my ADHD symptoms. This is the hardest to deal with.
      My 8 yr old boy however, is the kid that the teachers would like me to remove from school. He just can't be still or quiet. 😢

    • @mirateograd5248
      @mirateograd5248 Год назад +3

      you can't imagine how helpful your sharing is! I now feel avenged at the rage and shock that took over me when my mum called dad "slow" for misunderstanding, confusing, mistaking, losing things. It's CPTSD, clear as day, but i never took these (apparently tiny) behaviour aspects into account! He's a great and highly skilled lathe operator and never once made a mistake! learning and attention never a problem, either. thank you again!

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад +4

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommene doing some research.

    • @saraibloomquist4827
      @saraibloomquist4827 11 месяцев назад +2

      My hyperactivity manifests inward which is more common than people realize. I can't get my brain to every shut up and I'm often physically tense in the muscles. I was told both can be a way of my hyper activity showing up.

    • @Fefe559
      @Fefe559 11 месяцев назад

      @@saraibloomquist4827 omg. well said. I cant get my BRAIN TO SHUT THE F UP. Its exhausting that's what it should be called. the brain won't shut up for a second disease. grrrr. I get so frustrated with my own brain!

  • @kdub4344
    @kdub4344 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great info guys. Thank so much for sharing. Going to impliment your dietary suggestions on our whole family, looking forward to see the improvements on our 10 year old daughter who has been suffering from severe ADHD since she was 4.

  • @valerie4975
    @valerie4975 11 месяцев назад +9

    I am 58 and struggled with this my whole life. If I were not so motivated to succeed I would not even be getting by in the marginal manner that I am. Motivation only takes you so far. This video is bringing tears to my eyes. It's so hard not to give up.

    • @sallydeppe8575
      @sallydeppe8575 10 месяцев назад

      For some reason, girls/females/women are not seriously considered to have ADD. Too bad. Medication can be so helpful.

    • @futures2247
      @futures2247 6 месяцев назад +1

      try reading Sami Timimi's book insane medicine or the chair of DSM 4 Allen Frances Saving normal

    • @neerGdyahS
      @neerGdyahS Месяц назад +1

      Motivation is absolutely key. The people I know that have both ADHD and depression are in a damn rough way.

  • @Ida-Adriana
    @Ida-Adriana 2 года назад +83

    CPTSD can often be mistaken for ADHD.

    • @aubrieghhudson
      @aubrieghhudson Год назад +5

      Excellent point!

    • @yuppers1
      @yuppers1 Год назад +3

      True. It's hard to focus when you're triggered- or worse, triggered but don't know it (with alexithymia)

    • @LionKingSimba84
      @LionKingSimba84 Год назад +3

      Yes and no: Imho its not “mistaken”. ADHD describes a symptomology, CPTSD offers one possible causal explanation.

    • @stevec404
      @stevec404 Год назад +3

      Nvr Mnd - That was exactly my situation. See my three paragraph comment to the video. You nailed it!

    • @disorganizedclutter5513
      @disorganizedclutter5513 Год назад

      @@stevec404 Curious to see what you wrote but can't find the comment.

  • @chetyoubetya8565
    @chetyoubetya8565 11 месяцев назад +15

    I think there is a massive neurological component to ADHD as well because many times you also have tics and lots of physical signs as well. That is not from any environment. Not to mention the denial in families about other family members who also had this.

    • @therealnursesofdetroit
      @therealnursesofdetroit 10 месяцев назад

      It can both be true neuro and environmental like trauma …. Some people are self medicated etc
      Or bipolar or use medication to “focus”

    • @user-zt4zr7eg6z
      @user-zt4zr7eg6z 9 месяцев назад

      Everyone has ticks.

    • @pineappleflow2876
      @pineappleflow2876 9 месяцев назад

      I'm curious, have they proven that ADHD is caused my some brain issue?

  • @Marshadow69
    @Marshadow69 Год назад

    We all know most of what was talked about in this video - but this video is so elegant and comprehensive, and puts it all together in a way that is compelling.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

  • @GDogAU
    @GDogAU 3 года назад +4

    Fascinating. I really do believe we are getting closer to the truth.

  • @justinkeyser9130
    @justinkeyser9130 Год назад +52

    I disagree with this view that ADHD is in our culture. Short attention span might be a trained reaction to social media in our culture, but that is a far cry from actual ADHD. In my experience as someone who lives with ADHD, our culture is quite contrary to the symptoms of ADHD and is typically not understood by someone who doesn't have it. There is nothing cultural about it.

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 Год назад

      bad parenting

    • @montycora
      @montycora Год назад +18

      I agree and I find so disrespectful this kind of comment "Oh, I have a little bit of it..." or "everyone has a little bit of ADHD or autism". Really??? Live in the shoes of those who actually have those conditions and then let me know if 1) it's not a real disorder 2) Severely impacted people can deal without medication. There is SOOOOOO much more to ADHD than just not being able to focus...

    • @blueseptember2174
      @blueseptember2174 Год назад +3

      @@montycora I mean the reverse is true here too. Spend a day in "normal" people shoes and see how they struggle but have so many coping mechanisms that they use and took years of trying things to see what worked. I suffered for years but you would never know now because I had to change how I reacted to stressful people, events, my diet, fasting, calisthenics and walking as opposed to HIT, training my mind through puzzles and social events(this is like work for me).
      My spouse on the other hand thinks he is just different and can't be helped but honestly he hasn't tried one single thing. And he is not helping himself. I mean he might be right but how can he say that when he hasn't modified?

    • @montycora
      @montycora Год назад +9

      @@blueseptember2174 - This is not a contest to see who has a harder life. Being human is difficult, living in today's society is difficult. My point here is that they are dismissing the fact that ADHD is a real disorder and it is not something you can FIX with diet and exercise. Diet and exercise IMPROVE our problems, but won't make them go away. A good diet and exercise won't make me read a book, Ritalin will. Today is so cool to say that ADHD doesn't exist, everyone has a "bit of it" and it is just a matter of changing your diet and exercising. And if you take medication you are a junkie and you need to pull your shit together and get off those pills. Do you have to face that as a neurotypical person? Not to mention being called lazy or stupid because you can't focus or you procrastinate too much. So yeah, life is a struggle, but there are different struggles for different people and I don't think anyone should tell others what to do without walking their shoes in the first place and that is what they are doing in this video.

    • @montycora
      @montycora Год назад +1

      @@blueseptember2174 - I think there is plenty of neurotypical perspective out there, but thanks!

  • @asht.7640
    @asht.7640 Год назад +50

    I can really appreciate this video. Especially the story of the teacher who got diagnosed with ADHD and then still felt like maybe the diagnosis was wrong. I definitely get that feeling, like what if I'm making a big deal out of nothing and I really am just a lazy person who just needs to work harder and focus more? I know it sounds stupid, but I think almost anyone who gets diagnosed later in life can relate to that imposter feeling that you get along with the relief that it's not you so much as it is something that your body is doing that you have no control over. It's even worse when the people you've been surrounded by your whole life still make that opinion very clear.
    The situation where they're discussing the child who couldn't write kind of had me laughing. I remember very distinctly when I was learning how to write my letters, I believe it was when I was in kindergarten, I decided the letters that I was asked to write were boring so I added my own flair to them. I got in trouble for this and was told to stop trying to write in cursive. I tried to explain that I wasn't trying to write in cursive and that I didn't even know what it was, but that I was trying to make the letters pretty. They didn't believe me and just told me that I needed to stop and do it the way everyone else did. I still have samples of my writing from that time and it's not illegible, but I guess the little flicks and lines and loops that I added weren't exactly what was asked for. To my recollection I hated writing after that until I learned cursive.😂
    I think the phrase, " this patient's ADHD completely went away" is misleading. I believe that we can change a lot to minimize the symptoms but it's never going away.

    • @mirateograd5248
      @mirateograd5248 Год назад

      Ha, can't believe it! Your story goes to show how we can be misled, indeed, by the "spirit" of our time. fashion, even in medicine or education. great people before us actually had to be inventive (to say the least) to help kids that struggled in school, before even having therapy or books of pedagogy. also, i recall how frilly cursive writing was a sign of high education and privileged social status! I hope you have a good life now, where you learnt to find a place worthy of that brilliant kid inside you!

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommene doing some research.

    • @Alwizcaliteach
      @Alwizcaliteach 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@andreirobas5748 I suggest you read Trapfethen's replies under Paul Kent, who will be better able to explain this study to you. It went something like this: people who are ADHD AND gluten intolerant become much worse if they do not adhere to diet; so naturally they are much better if they do adhere. But ADHD is a deformation of the brain (and this is really interesting) hence is not cured by exercise, gluten-free diet, etc. See above.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Alwizcaliteach I read it in a book ffs. And I also read other studies which were not what you're saying.

    • @filletmignon5221
      @filletmignon5221 11 месяцев назад

      Ha I started writing the j in my name in cursive because I’ve wrote it so many time I got bored of the typical j

  • @user-fb1ys2lj9c
    @user-fb1ys2lj9c 11 месяцев назад +4

    This is such an important topic for everyone listening. Interesting to share I am exploring if I should take medicine. I am 56 years old with an auditory processing disorder and it's been so difficult but I also know I have all the symptoms of ADHD I am a bit concerned about taking meds but I feel exhausted with all the symptoms of Auditory Processing Disorder and ADHD. I am convincing myself to take medicine I am working with a Psychrists now exploring what is the best treatment for myself but now I am listening to this channel and the experts and now I am wondering if I should consider to take meds for the Adhd symptoms and I do suffer from depression and anxiety since I was a young child but I was never evaluated until I was 24 for the auditory processing disorder thank you for the insight shared in this channel

  • @RebekahMansker
    @RebekahMansker 2 года назад +6

    He's 12 now and refuses to eat properly. And my husband, his dad, doesn't take it seriously with what we eat. He brings sweets home always. He is always hiding it and will bring it out when we are ending our day.
    We use to eat super healthy! My son knew the things he shouldn't eat and was well disciplined. Thats out the window!

  • @joanmariz5573
    @joanmariz5573 Год назад +7

    My kids have been on the spectrum pretty much since toddlers & I have been asked to join every study, medication, I’ve been blamed for eating the wrong thing as a mom, not engaging my child enough, not giving my child enough fresh air, etc etc ….everything you can think of, but never have I heard they don’t have enough energy in their brain or HOW to help that!!!! I appreciate your conversation ❤ this is gold! How would I know what testing to ask the pediatrician to do? Heavy metal? Not sure she would do that just by a request. Really appreciate this conversation & information.

    • @tumbleweeduk7479
      @tumbleweeduk7479 Год назад +3

      Dr Natasha McBride wrote a book called gut and psychology and the GAPS diet came from that. She cured her son of autism and runs an autism clinic in the UK and I think has quite a few videos on RUclips. It might be useful for you. My friend has cured his schizophrenia with gluten sugar dairy free diet and Niacin, NAC and Lithium OROTATE which is an amazing supplement described by Dr John Gray in a video. It is calming and balancing for many conditions. Namaste 🙏💜🙏

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 Год назад

      Corporal punishment will help him.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад +1

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommene doing some research.

  • @rachelbrown2685
    @rachelbrown2685 Год назад +14

    I greatly appreciate this video. What is difficult is to find doctors like this in my area. Also, most functional doctors (that are out of state) do not take insurance. Many of these tests are also not covered by insurance (my son's food allergy testing was around $500 out of pocket). I wish these doctors would post a list of test and protocols that people could take to their primary care physician that would be willing to work in a more functional mindset. I am willing to work hard (aka change environment) and pay to overcome these problems, but I wish it wasn't so expensive and hard to do it. Let's face it: Human behavior keep doing what's it doing (eating poorly and not changing environment) because it's easier than making changes. Seems like the health care (aka sick care) system and people mind's need some resetting (including mine).

  • @gerardbird6423
    @gerardbird6423 3 года назад +1

    Blessings to you both, thank you very much

  • @sunla
    @sunla 7 месяцев назад +2

    This is a very neurotypical outlook on ADHD. Unfortunately, they don't understand *why* people with ADHD can be successful.
    It's not external influence that causes it. In the right environment, ADHD people can thrive, yes. This is because they need a support system that can understand that they are born with a different set of tools than the average Joe, and their support circle also shows them and guides them on how to use it effectively. ADHD people fail when their support system fails to see eye to eye with their alternative experience, and treats them like they just need to "do better" - I.e. Make lists, set timers, exercise more, etc

  • @spiritualspartan884
    @spiritualspartan884 11 месяцев назад +7

    “Genes load the gun but the environment pulls the trigger” this resonated big time for me. I am going to research psychiatric nutrition. My children and I have a commonality of seratonin/dopamine imbalance b vitamins folate mg. Prevention is key for us.

  • @ThingsILike12
    @ThingsILike12 11 месяцев назад +14

    This video is two years old. Coming out of an extremely emotionally abusive marriage and growing up with parents similar to the ex, I was diagnosed at 31 with ADD. I think it’s a trauma response. We tune out and use distractions to avoid the abuse.
    I’d love to see more research in this vein. I’ve yet to meet a person with ADHD that doesn’t have a toxic family of origin.
    Thanks for the great discussion!

    • @jennadanielescobar4440
      @jennadanielescobar4440 10 месяцев назад +4

      Look into Dr Gabor Mate and his look on it all, very interesting

    • @thomaskeijzer
      @thomaskeijzer 10 месяцев назад +1

      "We tune out and use distractions to avoid the abuse." This is it.
      I agree with the research part but if there's one thing I've learned, it's that no professional is able to put a label on me. Besides that, their 'solutions' are always the same: exercise more, eat more fruit and vegetables, and the usual healthy stuff I already figured out myself.
      There's no need to watch hours of videos on the subject. There's no need to get a confirmation from a 'professional'. You know who you are and the abuse you were dealing with.
      Besides that: all of these 'mental diseases' are perfectly logical in a broken, unhealthy society where most people don't live life but exist and try to survive.

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@thomaskeijzer Correct

    • @user-zt4zr7eg6z
      @user-zt4zr7eg6z 9 месяцев назад +1

      I Think totally stable Families care a lot. They provide excercise, psychotherapy and probably medication to some point.
      Also those with adhd from stable Families have often way more stable emotional regulation.
      Still they can struggle with executive functioning.

    • @user-zt4zr7eg6z
      @user-zt4zr7eg6z 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@thomaskeijzeryou mix everything up. I dont have c-ptsd and still could struggle.

  • @Abolitionista
    @Abolitionista Год назад +13

    We're primates and we need to frolic and play, we're not meant to sit in a building from 3 to 18 in box without nature stimulation. I didn't get diagnosed until 48. It was such an eyeopener. I haven't been able to hold down a job my entire life. I quit school in 7th grade bc I couldn't take being trapped in the building. It caused me horrible anxiety. On top of it I was able to learn the lesson the first day and then we would spend the rest of the week going over the same thing.

    • @egrogan6482
      @egrogan6482 Год назад +3

      You also sound like you are least higher than average intelligence - those are the folks who get bored easily. They learn things much more quickly than the average person and get bored with the repetitiveness which is how most schools do education. I'd love to know what percentage of those diagnosed with ADHD have genius level I.Q.s.

    • @Abolitionista
      @Abolitionista Год назад +1

      @@egrogan6482 I would say a high percentage.

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 Год назад

      Just a victim of bad parenting and low cl.ass oatterns of raising kids

    • @svetavinogradova4243
      @svetavinogradova4243 Год назад

      @@egrogan6482 None. They cannot pass IQ test, so below 80. ALWAYS.

    • @ccoodd26
      @ccoodd26 Год назад

      @@Abolitionista There are no confirmed links between ADHD and intelligence.

  • @bouabdellaouibasma4173
    @bouabdellaouibasma4173 2 года назад +5

    The best video I watched today! Thank you and please more videos about ADHD and mental health in general.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

  • @emagneticfield
    @emagneticfield Год назад +17

    My twin sons were diagnosed as adhd and seh. Adhd runs strongly on the dad’s part of the family. I was never diagnosed as adhd but it’s very strange that all my life I have had boundless energy and usually sleep only 4 hours a night.
    I am now 71 years old and still working. In order to stay organized I make notes to myself and make cheat sheets at work. This helps and at my age now the energy is a blessing. I stay away from junk food and try to restrict the sugar and carbs in my diet. If I can’t sleep I don’t worry about it. Reading, crossword puzzles, and meditation help too.
    I used to always tell my sons “it may be hard but you have to be functional in life.” That goes for me as well.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад +1

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommene doing some research.

  • @liliancastro6412
    @liliancastro6412 Год назад +5

    I am very thankful for all these informations. I am a brazilian lawyer and I am 42 y.o, trying my best. I really need the ritalin, but I am sure that nutrition, meditation and exercise is important to complete my treatment.

    • @montycora
      @montycora Год назад +1

      Yep, Liliam, COMPLETE is the operative word. Been doing keto for 3 years, but without Ritalin, it is just no good on its own. And I cannot meditate at all, so that is out of the equation...

  • @user-ft3ok4pf1b
    @user-ft3ok4pf1b 2 года назад +28

    Thank you so much for this podcast this was the most insightful out of all the videos I've watched. I was thinking about getting medication but i will try to eliminate the foods mentioned and add omega 3s B D vitamins zinc magnesium to see how i feel for at least a month. I'm almost 40 years of age and its been so hard I feel like a failure as I can't get anything done.

    • @queenj.8i895
      @queenj.8i895 Год назад +1

      “I have not failed 10,000 times-I've successfully found 10,000 ways that will not work.” ~Thomas Edison
      If we’re still breathing, God is still helping us figure things out. He’s still healing us from the inside out. He’s still revealing more & more.
      THE BEST meals are SLOW-COOKED. Slow is not bad, to take longer is not bad…for GOD to take His time with some of us more than others means we actually have a more important purpose. Can’t be rushed…
      So, He built-in the need for us to LEARN how to SLOW DOWN, & we also learn over time to actually appreciate getting to breathe & RELAX more & more. Where is all the pressure really coming from?? If “it” is not from God, then it’s of no eternal consequence & isn’t as crucial as you think.
      I pray Our Good Lord Jesus shows you who you really are in Him - a masterpiece! May He bless you with patience for yourself that will never run out. 🔥💥💚
      ~1 Corinthians 12 NLT & MSG~
      God bless! 🦋

    • @NotAnnaJones
      @NotAnnaJones Год назад +2

      Do it for more than a month! Also-Take the good vit Bs and the good magnesium. Research this. Cut out all sugar and most grains. Don’t drink at all, don’t smoke weed. You will feel like a new person!!

    • @thelittlelenora
      @thelittlelenora Год назад +1

      Gawd damn dude, easier said than done!

    • @queenj.8i895
      @queenj.8i895 Год назад +4

      Magnesium Threonate & Mag Malate combined will give you great focus & energy. Mag Glycinate for sleep, Mag Taurate for heart health. 😇

    • @verorsosa100
      @verorsosa100 Год назад +1

      Add 10 fast excercise daily in am. This tells your body to create chemicals that help you wake up, be more alert, focused and in better mood.

  • @carllelendt5452
    @carllelendt5452 Год назад +4

    Great discussion!!. This war on the mind is not a new one.

  • @AndreaGrinoldsSoap
    @AndreaGrinoldsSoap Год назад +46

    Thing that dropped my symptoms - adrenal support through a naturepath. I really only felt right when I was completely obsessed with a subject or did extreme amounts of yardwork. The adrenal supplement (desiccated cow adrenals) made a huge difference. I could focus without the complete tunnel vision and my memory got so much better. I'm only a month out but a lot of my symptoms were adrenal fatigue. Oh and I'm down to 1 pot of coffee a day from 3 and lost 14lbs. Why was it so quick?

    • @planetlimbo5981
      @planetlimbo5981 Год назад +5

      I'm glad you studied this to figure out the functioning of the other brains in the body. I'm going to research this now because of your comment so much thanks!

    • @disorganizedclutter5513
      @disorganizedclutter5513 Год назад +7

      Yes. I have adrenal fatigue which leads to executive dysfunction. It's a disaster when my body breaks down and gets to that point. People prone to burnout easily get there.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад +4

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommene doing some research.

    • @AndreaGrinoldsSoap
      @AndreaGrinoldsSoap Год назад +4

      @@andreirobas5748 yeah, my dad is a no bread guy. Confirmed. So that may be something to do, crap. I love bread.

    • @disorganizedclutter5513
      @disorganizedclutter5513 Год назад +7

      @@andreirobas5748 A lot of us don't eat gluten and it didn't make a difference. I have antibodies to pretty much everything.

  • @mosey09
    @mosey09 2 года назад +10

    Gotta remember this is not a presenter interviewing the expert this is two experts discussing their knowledge to the utmost for our benefit!!!!!!

  • @jjpauline1828
    @jjpauline1828 Год назад +1

    thanks for sharing such great information

  • @dianasoutha2769
    @dianasoutha2769 Год назад +2

    I absolutely love this episode.

  • @juicecoyote2991
    @juicecoyote2991 Год назад +13

    The high protein, vegetable based diet does help. I tried it at my doctor's suggestion. I never heard of it as something for ADHD until today. The diet did make a difference.

    • @leo.nordmann
      @leo.nordmann Год назад +2

      So meat and veggies? I looked into plant based alternatives a little, but it doesn't seem I can reasonably get the protein I should... So you're saying that it helped with your adhd?

    • @montycora
      @montycora Год назад +4

      @@leo.nordmann - Try keto! It has not removed my need for medication, but it has improved several other aspects. But the keto needs to be above 2mmol to work, below that won't scratch the surface.

    • @fionagoddardpsychicclairvo5660
      @fionagoddardpsychicclairvo5660 Год назад +1

      Wish you guys were in Australia. Can't find any doctors here who want to spend more than 2 minutes with patients

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

    • @montycora
      @montycora Год назад +1

      @@andreirobas5748 - sadly, it does not... I have removed gluten and symptoms persisted.

  • @SoulfulMole
    @SoulfulMole 3 года назад +17

    I'm a new-grad psychiatric nurse practitioner, and cannot overstate how much ADHD is influenced by lifestyle, and diet is a huge piece in the puzzle. Excellent video, would recommend, thanks for sharing.

    • @luckydogsanctuary
      @luckydogsanctuary 2 года назад

      Evan what do you think of Ray Peat's analysis of EPA's effect on the brain?

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

  • @misterbulger
    @misterbulger 8 месяцев назад +1

    Relateable. I procrastinated all week. Feeling bad about myself, I went out to the bar, then i came home and got everything done in a couple hours that i was putting off with a little buzz going. Must have upped my dopamine.

  • @CC-qh1dh
    @CC-qh1dh Год назад

    This was so informative 😊

  • @DrewJmsn
    @DrewJmsn Год назад +13

    I heard so much of my own story in their discussion. How does one find a doctor who approaches things this way?? My doc is pretty run-of-the-mill mainstream and uninspired. I chose him because he has a good reputation in the community and he's a DO, which I thought would mean he's more holistic. Sure, he's a nice guy, personable, doesn't rush. But he runs the basic blood work, tells me to eat less and exercise more, and throws pills at me. I ask him about tests, he says I don't need them. I asked about nutrition, he referred me to a dietitian who still pushes the 1980s FDA food pyramid. I asked about low carb, he says a calorie is a calorie. I ask him about supplements I'm hearing about all over the place and often he's never even heard of them. I tell him about things I read and hear and he's a little dismissive because I'm getting it from YT and the internet. I heard a lot of my own story in this talk. Mid 50s now, diagnosed ADHD almost 30 years ago, I'm not in ruins but my executive function is wobbly on my best days. I struggle every day to manage the bare basics more than anyone I know, and I fail at important stuff on the regular. I had severe eczema as a kid, asthma, food and environmental allergies, and all the classic ADHD indicators from toddlerhood onward. I am stressed and overwhelmed every day even as I deliberately take on less and less. This shows in my BP and metabolic numbers. A tenth of a point away from prediabetes and obvious signs of insulin resistance. I try to learn all I can and am very careful with my diet. I want to find and address root causes, not just throw pills at symptoms. But without a doctor who's onboard with this philosophy, I feel like I'm shooting in the dark. Is there some listing of modern, progressive thinking doctors like this? Can people interview a doctor before pouring time and money into an appointment? Do I just keep asking around? Or maybe I need to apply to med school? I really want to do better but am at a loss for how!

    • @mirateograd5248
      @mirateograd5248 Год назад

      i am going to print this and use it every chance i get ! thank you!

    • @DrewJmsn
      @DrewJmsn Год назад

      @@mirateograd5248 you're welcome? 🤣 How is it useful? Or did you mean to reply to another comment?

    • @mirateograd5248
      @mirateograd5248 Год назад

      @@DrewJmsn oh definitely here! where do i begin? haha!
      just yesterday i mentioned to someone how lucky i am to have a doctor who accepts my "like" for natural remedies in disfavour of industrial chemicals, and not for not trying! the closest i got to justifying this, through research of my own, is the possibility of me being "a bit" of an Aspie. if the label is what my doctor needs, he said nothing of it, but i appreciate him for accepting me as i am. can't say the same for most doctors i had to deal with, some bringing me to a worse condition or close to my end even, on several occasions. it may sound like i'm making light of it, but it took a tonne of mental work and physical recovery, i have to say...
      Moreover, recently i had the surprise of hearing a doctor say (when i asked one why they are such unhappy people and faulty life partners) that their dignity and position don't let them be looked down on by other social categories. Well, i still find it hard to fully grasp that, to say the least! guess i'm still in disbelief/ denial :))
      A saying comes to mind now, i heard it after getting burnt several times- Don't go to the praised tree with a sack . Fame precedes the actual professional, don't expect too much! but that's why you go there, to ask for help!
      Something else that caught my eye in your comment was the recollection of someone saying they wanted to enroll in med school (at 50yo) so they could self medicate, since doctors are just a big risk nowadays.
      Few of the doctors i know or heard of are willing to do research on the side. truth be told, after so many years of study, it must be tiring. nonetheless, i believe one should follow a path in life they can invest in and sustain, right? what goes around comes around, after all. mess people's lives up, don't expect to live untouched, praised doctor or not.
      getting back to my doctor (whom i don't see much of, thank god) says everything you eat makes you grow, no use in dieting. or...eat eggs until you feel your body wants no eggs (as for eating 1egg/ week). or...he hugs his patients tightly and pays them sudden loud compliments to measure general wellbeing, tonus etc or see about their mental sharpness and overall mood. Treatments? he makes them sound like temporary food you need to take- he once said "love, what do you mean the endocrinologist gave you this med for a lifetime? it won't be made for as long as you'll live, with all the walking you do and "weeds" you eat". He even hires other doctors like him and i can say they are quite busy and sought after.
      People like him are precious and don't come in great numbers, it's a lottery.
      by now, having met and worked closely with so many doctors (at my job)for almost 20 years, i can say that looking at their partners and kids is a good assessment tool. they can't hide forever who they truly are and what they believe in, right? and if there's no way of telling, then go for the one you hear spends most time with a patient during consultations and who isn't the most famous or busiest.

    • @mirateograd5248
      @mirateograd5248 Год назад +1

      @@DrewJmsn so basically thank you for voicing some of the fears, concerns and needs more of us might have. For ourselves or our beloved. It is brave and responsible of you, and you make it look more like an act of social involvement rather than distrust in the medical practice

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад +1

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommene doing some research.

  • @SoupCannot
    @SoupCannot 2 года назад +7

    From the description: "This episode is sponsored by paleovalley and farmacy." Something to consider.

    • @benybilly3519
      @benybilly3519 Год назад

      You HAVE SHOW the Most Necessary & underestimated Necessary... RELEVANT POINT that as 🆘✡️ Expected from Average Passionate/Brainless & Braindead People/Followers /Herds Population were incapable & unable to **See what you have BOLDLY WAS NECESSARY to Bring to *The Surface*
      Thanks for Shearing Your Necessary Observational Skills...THAT OBVIOUSLY nowadays ...are and have been FOR QUITE AWHILE .... extremely Rare/uncommonly to be able to FIND.
      take care...
      And please KEEP SPREADING your High Eye-opening Observational Skills 🆘‼️💪🤓

  • @cheetobandido546
    @cheetobandido546 7 месяцев назад +1

    Pisses me off when "experts" perseverate on the hyperactivity element of ADHD. That alone has led to generations of females with ADHD not receiving help. This guy needs to get with the times!

  • @mariagoldman4109
    @mariagoldman4109 8 месяцев назад +1

    It awful that this type of help is not covered on most insurance. So many suffer because of it.

  • @chanilee6070
    @chanilee6070 Год назад +7

    I truly wish the testing for functional/holistic health was not so expensive. We know we need naturally minded help, but the cost is too much. We found an awesome practitioner, but I cannot afford $400 an hour for each person, plus testing and supplements regularly (and appointments every 3 months) We were high in mercury or arsenic. My poor husband couldn't even go bc of the cost and he let our daughter and I go, and I couldn't even continue care. I truly wish we could make sure the good guys make enough, and still let us little people be able to afford it. (its not that I'm not willing to spend money, i've spent YEARS and THOUSANDS on trying o figure out my issue and finally last year ADHD was my diagnosis at 38, and now we're spent...quite literally.)

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

  • @robertbrewer1152
    @robertbrewer1152 Год назад +20

    The micro biome is so incredibly important. I suffered from what they called obsessive defiance disorder since I was a kid until around age 33 which is borderline adhd some of the same issues and also have fibromyalgia just a constant pain in my whole body and testicular penile and pain in my groin area i eventually became so sick I couldn’t no longer function over time I became extremely allergic to mold and dogs and wood dust and my life was absolutely miserable I hated being alive it was so painful. My sister led me to diet and detox and later to detoxing and fasting and I fasted from all wheats for a week and nearly all my symptoms started to disappear. I had sever chronic inflammatory response syndrome and leaky gut etc the list of ailments was so long some of my my teeth started to decay and I finally realized my gut was so compromised I wasn’t able to absorb many of the vitamins and minerals I was eating so now I detox regularly and can only eat limited amounts of organic whole grain bread and only natural sugars etc but at age 34 for the first time in my life I felt like the person I really am. Emotional roller coaster because I lost this anger that came from mold exposure and eating wheat which I’ve learned im allergic to. I still have fibromyalgia but it’s become bearable and manageable I no longer take any medication except allergy medicines and ibuprofen and regularly clean my sinuses . Something still affects me I have yet to discover or am missing out on something I’m not getting in my diet I can’t seem to figure it out but at least my inflammatory pains are nearly gone and my anxiety is nearly non existent unless I work in a moldy home or high in dust. I suffered from intense migraines and now occasionally get a mild one. It’s amazing to even be where I’m at it connected me spiritually on a new level where before I was deaf to God. Now my step daughter is dealing with similar issues more along the lines of adhd but also experience hormonal issues and strange bleeding she bleed from her breasts and have done many scans and brain scans and can’t find anything so I believe she’s suffering from inflammation in her sinuses and finally brain causing her pituitary gland to compress and causing this very abnormal bleeding to occur and her starting period to be abnormal and intermittent she’s 12 it’s caused her life to fall apart she can’t manage school and has been doing it from a computer but even then she’s so all over the place she can’t focus and struggles to do simple assignments. I don’t know where to start she has a sinus issue since birth her ear canals are small her tubes failed and has chronic ear infections which we can’t get under control she’s allergic to penicillins and I’m trying to get her mom to recognize inflammation as the culprit why she has been frantically searching for cancers etc I can see the issue or part of it. How do I get someone in denial to change her diet when she doesn’t even acknowledge my triumph and tribulations? The bleeding started the same day she started these time released amphetamine salt which I advised against because of her high inflammatory symptoms now she’s not taking the medicine anymore she still continues to bleed off and on to the point the school will send her home because her shirt is saturated with blood more pink then only blood high in prolactin. Otherwise she’s healthy but I’m at a loss because her mom wants to get her back on regular adderol instead of changing her diet she continues to feed her the worst foods possible for someone like me. Ramen noodle cheap waffles etc. she will allow her to skip family healthy meals and eat cheap processed wheat soups etc. I’m at a loss and I feel I’ve studied more on this issue then any doctor she’s been to they all don’t have a clue and just do a scan send her home and nothing. I tell her she needs to focus on the ear infection she completely discredits that as a cause so she will get antibiotics and not give them to her and I work so I am not always here to make sure she follows the prescription which she routinely never gives them to her.

    • @hannagabrielle3325
      @hannagabrielle3325 Год назад +4

      I'd say that you can maybe ask to give it a test run, there will be nothing to lose... For 6 weeks, clean up the diet and see how she reacts. If nothing changes, then okay, the mom can continue as she was (but we all know that won't be the case) - but it has to be 100%. No junk in the household for those 6 weeks, everyone needs to be on board. Maybe even come at it from the angle of "If the environment suffers from pollution, why wouldn't our bodies?" We have lived all these years without all these harmful foods, and now recently we are eating them in excess. Kids are the most susceptible because they are in the developmental stage.
      On another note, I also have fibromialgia and had sinusitis for a long time. I got rid of it by getting rid of commercial shampoos, conditioners, detergents. Apparently I was allergic to all of those things as well. So be aware to all the things that come in contact with your body on a daily basis (not just food).

    • @robertbrewer1152
      @robertbrewer1152 Год назад +3

      @@hannagabrielle3325 that’s a good idea thank you for your response I’ve never really thought to look there. I’ve always had sinusitis also. It’s gotten so much better but something definitely is still bothering me. I took testing for a very limited allergic reaction panel and dust mites was one I’ve just attributed it to the environment for fibromyalgia and sinus issues but I’m so sensitive to cheap wheats why not something else I’ve never been able to make the connection to.

    • @Slipcoverchic
      @Slipcoverchic Год назад +5

      Jordon Petersons daughter figured out herself her issues, meat ..I f I remember correctly and changed her life her dad tried it and it changed his… this may be an answer for more than one person. He didn’t have issues like her but it changed how he felt and healed him.

    • @tonir6532
      @tonir6532 Год назад

      ​@@hannagabrielle3325 Re fibromyalgia what set mine off was sensitivities to preservatives eg calcium proprionate (282) in bread together with other chemicals. Recently I experienced fibromyalgia after many years this time it was related to malabsorption of nutrients. Once I started supplementing in high doses my fibromyalgia body pain disappeared. I was already eating low carb healthy food but I was not absorbing the nutrients due to poor gut microbiome which was destroyed by long term antibiotic use.

    • @MeMe-dw1sm
      @MeMe-dw1sm Год назад +3

      My wife is the same, they're ignorant when it comes to healthy eating.
      All 5 kids fat, and full of ailments related to inflammation

  • @mable90shaynne
    @mable90shaynne Год назад +3

    I believe this so much. Mental illness and disorders run heavy in my family, so does poor gut health and poor diet. I feel so much better in every way when I'm on top of my nutrition. Funny thing is my adhd gets in the way of being consistent but over the years I've made huge improvements!

    • @verorsosa100
      @verorsosa100 Год назад +1

      Excercise at least 10 minutes a day early in am helps tons.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

  • @rf5963
    @rf5963 3 года назад +13

    who else was very interested then started to zone out, become distracted, or fast forward to the end?

  • @FeonaLeeJones
    @FeonaLeeJones 3 года назад +42

    Who else here has ADHD? I have to take so many focus pills to keep me from getting so distracted 😓

    • @teresadougherty8722
      @teresadougherty8722 3 года назад +10

      Dr Ken Berry, Carnivore Diet. Ketovore Diet.

    • @ancm19
      @ancm19 2 года назад +5

      @@teresadougherty8722 funny enough I went vegan 6 years ago and my symptoms got much better

    • @shelleysmith6667
      @shelleysmith6667 2 года назад +2

      Yup. nothing has fixed my Dopamine/ADHD problem. I'm def healthier but still acute ADHD symptoms😭

    • @juliesaadwellness
      @juliesaadwellness Год назад +6

      @@teresadougherty8722 Yes! It worked for me. I started keto just to lose weight and somewhere in there on my way from chubby to skinny I was suddenly able to sit down and do my work, no prob Bob. My marriage has also improved a lot as my emotions are much more under control. Also the PMDD I’d had since I was a teenager is gone. I was a hardcore vegan for over a decade but it didn’t help. Keto did.

    • @srest-hn6zu
      @srest-hn6zu Год назад +4

      I have severe ADHD but stopped taking meds at age 16. Glad I did. I just figured out ways to manage it. Smart phone helps a lot. I do take a lot of breaks at work though 😄 also low carb helps. Minimalism is a good coping strategy - the less stuff / details you have to deal with the less distraction you have and easier to stay on track.

  • @pauladuncanadams1750
    @pauladuncanadams1750 11 месяцев назад +5

    As a child, I was SEVERELY punished for my ADHD, both at school and at home.

  • @internetmail3888
    @internetmail3888 7 месяцев назад +1

    I've twice met severe ADHD cases who were so severe in symptoms they could not hold a basic conversation with anyone. Are you guys seriously telling me such people are not severely disabled?

  • @Ginverh
    @Ginverh Год назад

    Thanks for this great video.

  • @devynryan1341
    @devynryan1341 Год назад +3

    I had to quit watching when he said "I have a little ADHD. I can read an entire book without getting distracted but I get distracted sometimes." Soooo you don't know what ADHD is.

  • @dailydoseofmedicinee
    @dailydoseofmedicinee 3 года назад +68

    Adult ADHD symptoms may include:
    Impulsiveness.
    Disorganization and problems prioritizing.
    Poor time management skills.
    Problems focusing on a task.
    Trouble multitasking.
    Excessive activity or restlessness.
    Poor planning.
    Low frustration tolerance.

    • @ethimself5064
      @ethimself5064 3 года назад +17

      @Danger Zone People with ADHD/ADD typically have the ability to Hyperfocus

    • @DrSpooglemon
      @DrSpooglemon 3 года назад +10

      Video games are intensely stimulating and 'hyperfocus' is a myth. People with ADHD have difficulty attending to things that are not immediately stimulating and difficulty drawing ourselves away from thing that are immediately stimulating.

    • @ethimself5064
      @ethimself5064 3 года назад +11

      @@DrSpooglemon Hyperfocusing is not a myth whatsoever. And hyper focusing is exactly what u just mentioned. If a strong interest is found, off to the races we go.
      Should you want the best information on the planet about the subject, this is it: Dr. Daniel Amen's book Called - Healing ADD which can be found in any library system. Before he wrote the book back about 97 or so, he had 14,000 SPECT brain scans under his belt with decades of experience. One can find him in here also on the subject including his general Bio. If one wants the best, there it is, period. Educate yourself to a higher level of understanding this subject

    • @DrSpooglemon
      @DrSpooglemon 3 года назад +14

      @@ethimself5064 What people call 'hyperfocus' in ADHD is no different from distractability. Distractability is the inability to draw attention away from extraneous stimuli when the task at hand is not immediately stimulating. It is a matter of our attention being regulated externally by the environment rather than internally. To call one particular manifestation of that 'hyperfocus' make it sound like a gift. Makes it sound sexy. In reality is is nothing more than being TOTALLY distracted by something stimulating when there invariably is something more important that needs attending to. Speaking of which, I am 'hyperfocused' right now. ;)

    • @ethimself5064
      @ethimself5064 3 года назад +3

      @@DrSpooglemon Who cares what you have to say. I gave you the best information on the planet.

  • @HealthcareHeart
    @HealthcareHeart Год назад +2

    Amazing video. Thank you doctors!!! I’m glad I have a great GP and psychiatrist

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

  • @amandasymon4363
    @amandasymon4363 11 месяцев назад

    Loving this pod cast 👌👊

  • @UrbanomicInteriors
    @UrbanomicInteriors Год назад +17

    What about the connection between trauma and ADD?

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

    • @vh2205
      @vh2205 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@andreirobas5748yes gluten may affect, but is not the only factor.

  • @adelabrent4792
    @adelabrent4792 2 года назад +8

    WE NEED FUNCTIONAL MEDICINE NOW!

  • @rickcinway2312
    @rickcinway2312 9 месяцев назад +1

    Root causes!! How about the eye drops nurses put into newborns eye and they slice their heel to get a blood sample. I asked her why is she putting drops in my newborn son’s eyes. She said it was to prevent him from going blind , if he contracts a disease while in the birth canal. I told her, he was born caesarean. Before I could stop her she quickly put the drops in his eyes. Someone, should do a study, whereby they check the incidence of ADHD cases between hospital born people and home/midwife births.

  • @dianehayes8385
    @dianehayes8385 Год назад

    Thank you for this so important

  • @IamusTheFox
    @IamusTheFox 2 года назад +5

    @8:55 We do know the cause though. Parts of the brain are smaller, less neurotransmitter receptors. Infact, we know the why so well we know why stimulants help.

  • @oraclex6
    @oraclex6 Год назад +5

    I was always being called out since 1st first grade My mother constantly have received calls saying that i wasnt paying attention. I was very shy and timid. When i grew up we never knew about this. We grew up in the 70's and i think our food was fine I wish they knew about this when I was young because it affected me learning in school. I went to Catholic school and i just got pushed through. I really hated school. If it wasnt for my parents i would of dropped out
    I have a high school but i always struggled with school. Also my ex has it probably just as bad as me
    Thankfully i got my daughter dignosed and medicated and she was a honor student and was able to go to college.
    So it obviously got passed down to my daughter and she had double whammy

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад +1

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommene doing some research.

  • @anyariv
    @anyariv 7 месяцев назад

    I got diagnosed in my late 30s. Specifically because after having a kid I felt completely sideswiped by life and got diagnosed with anxiety. I was stressed out ALL the time and everything sent on high alert. Once I started taking ADHD medicine, everything clicked into place.

  • @itsJuanita1
    @itsJuanita1 Год назад +1

    Glad I found this… I have JUST STARTED getting my diet right again. I noticed since I stopped eating chicken daily pretty much, my whole system has malfunctions! My adhd really became more prominent I know realise. Food is life 😊

  • @GygaxGirl
    @GygaxGirl Год назад +6

    MTHFR mutations are a topic I'd really appreciate more information from you about. My functional Dr says they're the key to most health issues.

    • @5050hawaiianstar
      @5050hawaiianstar Год назад +3

      If you do have that gene mutation, that means your body is not able to properly process/absorb folate. I have the mutation, I got tested for it by two different gene testing companies. And due to such mutation, I have to take the Methylated version of Folic acid or folate.
      Furthermore, you have to have enough intrinsic factor produced in the stomach lining, in order to have folate bind with it, and be absorbed in the small intestine. If you have poor, gastrointestinal health, then you will need to take an oral (buccal) form of the Methylated folate

    • @5050hawaiianstar
      @5050hawaiianstar Год назад +1

      ^^^ intrinsic factor is needed/required to bind to folate and vitamin B 12, so that your body can process it in the ileum portion of your small intestines(that’s the end, before the beginning of your large intestines).

    • @GygaxGirl
      @GygaxGirl Год назад

      @@5050hawaiianstar Thank you. I can't take the methylated forms as they give me anxiety and sleeplessness. I am taking small amounts of Folate and B Minus by Seeking Health. I do have gut issues that I'm working on with a functional dr.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад +2

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

    • @crazyjkass
      @crazyjkass 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@5050hawaiianstar 70% of all modern humans have the mutant type. The wild type is less common! People with mutant MTHFR have a 40% higher chance of having depression. I have the common A->T mutation but there's also the more severe G->C mutation that can result in severe neurological dysfunction/profound mental disability.

  • @sharonnycum5414
    @sharonnycum5414 Год назад +17

    I had a teacher growing up that said every child is brilliant and it depends on the teacher to get their attention and to keep their attention and to pay attention to them. Our teachers are absolutely useless now. If you get the right person to teach you you won't have any problems. My son has schizophrenia they say there's nothing you can do but his meds are at the lowest they have been and it depends on how you treat him. Just like anyone they all deserve respect and love.

    • @margareth1504
      @margareth1504 Год назад +2

      For a time, there was a woman who visited with her teenage son, and she treated (spoke to him )badly with disrespect, however her ex partner also had used much disrespect towards her! And frequently. When her child responded to her with the same disrespectful verbal jargon, the mum responded to that with enormous shock and anger which over time escalated on her part to her screaming loudly swearing badly at him. It was rough. The child mostly used low volume swearing in response to her shrill high pitched sounding hysteria. Over time she had gained some sort of information and would scream it at him like a warning that he had to stop his behaviour because he had the top seven symptoms of being a typical suicide case - she said. (?) She screamed those symptoms at him. :- He objected to authority, He was outspoken, he was good looking, he was a perfectionist, he was a child of divorced parents, he was intelligent, and his birth placement amoung siblings. (Poor kid) It all seemed so crazy. Screaming rubbish like that at him was so wrong. In the end it was all someone else’s fault, the child ended up medicated for the long term as though the problem was the child. In my view the mum was extremely over reactive and terribly verbally volatile toward him, but the mostly unseen father who was clearly dreadfully spoken toward the boys mum , well he wasnt medicated, just the outspoken child.
      The mum then reverted to a more sympathetic view of her medicated child, he was reduced from his previous strengths of arguing back etc. much more placid. but also coaching for much sympathy toward herself having to go through all of this. Long details of the saga.
      To my knowledge they were all brought up on tubs of various junk foods in plastic containers, and cartons of soft drinks for conveniences around the emotional collapses after the big outbursts.
      I didn’t use either of that sort of thing.
      You never know the real base issues, but to me it looked like this one outspoken child, beside the quiet more fearful ones, was easily highly visibly being a mirror version of both the parents terrible conduct. He behaved as his father did badly toward the woman. He behaved outspoken and badly like his mum too.
      While at times the mum used extremely loud emotional hysteria, at the child, she saw the child as the problem, and also saw she was left to deal with it alone, because the ex partner apparently refused to believe the child was behaving badly.
      I think those children saw their mother being grossly disrespected by their father the ex, and the mum could not deal with the result of all of them being that way. The ex was mostly out of the picture and the ageing child remained in view, his part an outspoken child on target as the main problem.
      Then there is the fact that his life fills in knowing he was the problem.
      The father never changed himself, but the child was medicated and forced to change. (In that era)

    • @tumbleweeduk7479
      @tumbleweeduk7479 Год назад

      My friend cured his 47 years of schizophrenia by going on a gluten free dairy free sugar-free diet and taking 500 mg of niacin with every meal and 1800 mg of NAC and three tablets of 10 mg each I think of lithium OROTATE . The Niacin cure was discovered by Dr Abraham Hoffer and the NAC discovered in 1947.
      There are plenty of videos on lithium orotate, a particularly good one by Dr John Gray. My friend also takes about 10,000 i.u. vitamin D3 with K2.
      He was told schizophrenia was genetic but his siblings do not have it. He was born in Scotland in January and so his mother would have been vitamin D deficient and she had lost the previous baby and was unable to breastfeed him and he was therefore a sickly child and given loads of antibiotics and I believe very early vaccines.
      When he was 18 he was diagnosed as needing iodine which was very effective but when he moved to another area was diagnosed with schizophrenia and then drugged until I did the research and he got off the drugs at the age of 65 after a very sad and wasted life. He is a completely different person now, all the voices and paranoia are gone and he is finally motivated and planning his future.
      I am so angry with what the medical profession did to him, because I have no medical training yet I was able to find the research but they just pumped drugs into him to dumb him down. It is criminal how they do this to men in particular as they assume they are violent. Namaste 🙏💜🙏

    • @f.d.6667
      @f.d.6667 Год назад +5

      I am a teacher with AD(H)D/Asperger's. I respect all my students and try my best to divide my attention in such a way that the majority of my students can finish my courses with a maximum of academic advancement. Some kids are brilliant, some are not. Some have found the right type of education, some need to find a place that better fits their brain's needs. Some need to be introduced to methods that help them to make use of our existing system, be it study aids, meds or a coach. Sometimes the parents are the problem while the kid would do just fine. However, in order to succeed in life, *everybody* needs to build up a certain level of frustration tolerance and resilience against boredom... I allow those students who are "bored" or who feel overwhelmed to draw/scribble whatever they want during class and then study/re-learn at home at their own pace. If the scribbling intensifies, I stop and declare a 10-min break for everybody. This way the other student's focus doesn't get disrupted and we can maintain a quiet, concentrated and productive atmosphere in the classroom. ... Is it working? Certainly not always. But recently, a student (not in my course) who has a mild form of autism wandered into my classroom during class and made himself comfortable in a corner "because he liked the atmosphere" - I count that as a success...

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommene doing some research.
      Same for schizophrenia, they have elevated anti-gliadin antibodies. Or anti-secalin antibodies in case they eat rye bread.

    • @b.bailey8244
      @b.bailey8244 9 месяцев назад

      Brava! Well said.

  • @haneenidreesahmed7908
    @haneenidreesahmed7908 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very beneficial piece. Thanks Doctor Hyman!
    I'm curious though, what type of doctor do I consult to get checked for 'inflammation'?
    Thank you

    • @b.bailey8244
      @b.bailey8244 9 месяцев назад

      if you can't find that kind of doctor, just do the checklist of symptoms for inflammation; how many of them you have. For instance, rashes, candida, IBS, arthritis, tendinitis. Any 'itis' symptom name is inflammation. Pancreatisis. Myocarditis. Diverticulitis... you get the idea.

  • @amechealle5918
    @amechealle5918 6 месяцев назад

    I enjoyed learning from this video but I found Dr. Hyman talking over the other Dr. Who was actually the reason I watched this video. I really wanted to hear more from the other Dr.

  • @Laueee95
    @Laueee95 2 года назад +20

    Environment and diet do play a role but the brain is wired differently.
    Stimulants affect ADHDers differently. It’s a clear sign the medication has an atypical effect on them. They do help.

    • @shelleysmith6667
      @shelleysmith6667 2 года назад +8

      Yes! Adderall puts me in a zen-like state. More focused, less stimulated....because I can get shit done.

    • @TheCuratorIsHere
      @TheCuratorIsHere Год назад +1

      It’s 100% diet.

    • @montycora
      @montycora Год назад +9

      @@TheCuratorIsHere - Really? I have been doing keto for 3 years and I still have ADHD....

    • @jendayiKa
      @jendayiKa Год назад

      ​@@montycora Try a high water fruit fast, do it for 30 days. Or juice fast. Or 7 day water fast with wildcrafted seamoss. See what happens if u undergo these protocol.

    • @adriancoroi8424
      @adriancoroi8424 Год назад +6

      @@jendayiKa yeah I'm pretty sure we'll still gonna have some adhd. I guess the world renowned leading psychiatrist on adhd would be aware of the treatment based on watermelon, instead of stimulants.

  • @christofferpedersen3939
    @christofferpedersen3939 3 года назад +7

    ❤️🙏thanks - please more content on adult ADD 🙏🙏🙏

  • @Jamieforeals
    @Jamieforeals 11 месяцев назад +2

    Just know that , the labels helps us get the right helps you remove that and we continue to struggle with adhd being taken serious. It is absolutely disruptive and impairing

  • @likahefferan1272
    @likahefferan1272 9 месяцев назад

    I am so happy to watch this video. I would love to get treatment from you doctor. Do you still seeing new patients?

  • @base99498
    @base99498 3 года назад +9

    Task completion with adhd?
    Imagine a bumper-car obstacle course.

    • @florencelovme
      @florencelovme 2 года назад

      I thought of It as a traIn track where I walk on the wIde road for an hour to get somewhere socIfIc and when I'm nearly there the raIL bars go down for the traIn and I keep waItIng and waItIng for the traIn but the bars remaIn down and I can't get to the other sIde so I Just stand there wonderIng what the fck happened
      I hope that makes sense

  • @karenblock6352
    @karenblock6352 Год назад +5

    Love this! Thank you for this and for Good Dr.'s doing these podcasts. The teacher's need to be educated about this because they are the ones doing the diagnosing and then telling the parents they have all of these problems but they are wrong and that is why there was such an explosion of parents going in and saying my child has ADD or ADHD and they were all automatically put on medication that was not correct at all. I know I watched it happen.

    • @b.bailey8244
      @b.bailey8244 9 месяцев назад

      IMO they put kids on meds to make the school agendas function in a one size fits all way, which does a great disservice to all neuro- diverse people!

  • @YodithGideonSupiConsultig
    @YodithGideonSupiConsultig Год назад

    You have mentioned all my issues. Iron gluten amino acids... Very eye opening. Thank you.

  • @samanthatwohig9710
    @samanthatwohig9710 Год назад

    Absolutely blew my mind.

  • @nl1234
    @nl1234 3 года назад +5

    I recommend Dr. Hyman to bring Russell Barley who is known as a world-renowned top researcher psychologist for ADHD

    • @shelleynowwilson
      @shelleynowwilson 2 года назад +3

      he is all about the drugs

    • @nl1234
      @nl1234 2 года назад +2

      @@shelleynowwilson I agree with you. However, he does compartmentalize this condition rather than as a disorder in terms of brain neurology remarkably. I do not necessarily agree with all the meds that he recommends, but he also does go indepth about different tools you can use (like a brain map tool) to combat ADHD as an adult, or teaching parents and teachers preventative methods and guidance to help children to prevent from further struggles they will have as adults. I think that its important for doctors with different opinions to sit together and discuss what they can agree or disagree on to meet in the middle for our best health outcomes.

    • @montycora
      @montycora Год назад +2

      @@shelleynowwilson - If you had ADHD and try a medication that changed your life completely, would you still demonize it?

    • @michaelwilliams5506
      @michaelwilliams5506 Год назад +2

      ​@@montycora yeah, what a crazy idea... Treat an actual physical neurodeficit with pharmaceuticals that resolve the deficits. Who woulda thought that giving medicines that treat the specific deficits have measurable benefits?
      This whole attitude that is a diet issue just pisses me off.

  • @lucada32
    @lucada32 2 года назад +3

    Are there any recommended books by you guys to learn even more about the true causes of adhd?

  • @paganmoon8540
    @paganmoon8540 5 месяцев назад +1

    I have done the elimination, meditation, take a multitude of suppliments and I am no different. I also now have a lupus diagnosis on top of the ADHD, which with the chronic fatigue is making my ADHD worse.

  • @TheresaSwan-Armitstead
    @TheresaSwan-Armitstead Год назад

    I'm glad he mentioned the MTHFR gene. It's very common and one of the symptoms are ADHD.

  • @yumifl.5133
    @yumifl.5133 Год назад +7

    I was Diagnosed with Adhd when I was in 2nd grade. I was taking Retilan but my mom took me off it as I becme much more Hyperactive. I never took any meds after that and simply went on living my life. As I have reached adulthood I realized that this problem has become more Prevelent and I am still Hyper, which you would think I would not be at age 46. The thing is I did try Adderall as an adult now and the medication actually worked, it made me concentrate and calmed me down. I am just afraid to depend on this mediation for life to conquer my Adhd. Is there any other way to help my Adhd? Thanks BTW I do live a healthy lifestyle(food wise). I do drink ocassionaly, but when i have a drink or two I tend to calm down. I actually have the opposite affect on alcohol then others do. It literslly calms me down, Although I do not drink often.

    • @Laueee95
      @Laueee95 11 месяцев назад +5

      Some people need medication for the rest of their lives. Used as prescribed by your doctor, there is little chance for abuse or addiction.
      I am ADHD-PI and Bipolar. I take meds for those two disorders and will for the rest of my life. It's not as bad as someone who has another condition just because it is in the brain. It's not wrong to use a medication that helps you.

  • @quinimus
    @quinimus 3 года назад +20

    Super fat and very exciting net hear. Both my daughter and I have ADD. We board in Denmark. But where is it just so sad that we do not get such tests at all where they go to the bottom and find the exact problems. We just take the test also find the medications that help as best as possible. Denmark could learn so much from you.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

  • @patricamariposa3756
    @patricamariposa3756 11 месяцев назад +2

    Hearing you people joke about ADHD in the 1st minute was extremely disheartening.
    Especially since I've spent most of my adult life homeless, bouncing from job to job. Never done drugs, I dont even take modern medicine. I don't drink or smoke. I really believe I am cursed with bad luck.
    I am currently homeless with a preteen trying to figure out how to fix our life because I just recently remembered I had ADHD.
    I was diagnosed at 5yrs old, and stopped taking medication at 15.
    So it completely slipped my mind.
    Relearning what this means for me and how we got here and how I can improve for my kid.
    Seeing you guys make lite of it is really discouraging.

    • @patricamariposa3756
      @patricamariposa3756 11 месяцев назад +1

      I almost stopped watching, but against my impulse to write you off I stayed, because I love research and true research involves listening to all sides in order to discern the facts.
      I'm glad I didn't since I never heard that ADHD and other mental illness connected to inflammation in the brain.
      This gives me something to focus my research into.
      I always thought it was strange something like epilepsy and autism could be improved by changing the diet but not other mental illnesses.

  • @base99498
    @base99498 3 года назад +23

    The most crippling symptom of adhd is the
    lack of self-talk commentary which keeps people on task. This play-by-play gets interrupted by stimuli so often that a minor task takes forever. If I’m lacking commentary then I think in terms of a given task having a signature beat and rhythm.
    The flow of a thing is most important for task completion.

    • @rebeccaalam9261
      @rebeccaalam9261 3 года назад +1

      Can you explain to me what you mean by self-talk commentary?

    • @base99498
      @base99498 3 года назад +8

      @@rebeccaalam9261 self-talk is your inner voice that keeps you on task.
      I personally need to talk myself through a task or I’m screwed.
      “Now I’m cleaning the dish, getting the edges, now the back”
      “Loading it in the washer, have 4 more dishes, then I’m finished”
      Sometimes I make a stupid song out of it...
      Otherwise the brain jumps ahead to what’s next to explore which leads you off to whatever feels good and nothing was finished.

    • @shelleysmith6667
      @shelleysmith6667 2 года назад

      What is self-talk commentary?

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.

    • @aaronanytime8897
      @aaronanytime8897 11 месяцев назад

      @@base99498 I didn't check the replies before I wrote my reply. You brought up dishes lol. When I think as you do when doing dishes, it annoys me, and I struggle to do them! So, it's not weird or crazy to talk yourself through stuff in this manner? I thought I was adding to my mental burnout/exhaustion doing this...

  • @DaneArcher2000
    @DaneArcher2000 11 месяцев назад +6

    I was diagnosed with "an attention deficit disorder when 12 yrs. old, in 1982, before AD(H)D was much of a thing. It has ruled (and in some cases) imploded parts of my life, relationships. But I never ate junk food. So while I agree the sugary breakfast foods aren't healthy, they certainlly dis ' cause it,

  • @jeffayya
    @jeffayya Год назад +1

    Circumstances in life can change someone to be in ADHD anxious signs and symptoms

  • @carolapersoon7501
    @carolapersoon7501 Год назад

    And self regulation is key for every body. It may be harder to archive for some than for others, but it is key in growing up and having a fullfilling life.

  • @kerryanneiss4793
    @kerryanneiss4793 3 года назад +23

    Okay, so clearly inflammation affects the brain and brings out ADHD symptoms, but what about when your diet is perfect but environmental factors affect your symptoms and aren't able to be changed so easily? Ex, living conditions, working conditions?

    • @sabinahadzipasicbesic6613
      @sabinahadzipasicbesic6613 Год назад +1

      Do you mean like stress? Stress messes up your stomach acid. Low stomach acid means bad digestion and bad digestion means poor vitamine absorption

    • @caitm8209
      @caitm8209 Год назад +1

      I think you still have to find ways to process oxidative stress better. There is no such thing as a perfect diet and we all respond differently to different foods. For some of us healthy foods cause stressload on our body we can't process well. Also if we don't exercise nothing can be processed through the body well at all. Thats why cardio is one of the best things for ADHD. If our body is not efficiently processing stressors in the body, things producing oxidative stress in the cells, then we get worse. But you can't say my diet is perfect and my cells arenot under stress from it. How can you know that? Some people literally can not consume vegetables and have to go on a carnivore diet because we are all set up differently. No perfect diet....

    • @kellymcdonell9687
      @kellymcdonell9687 Год назад +1

      Maybe you have food sensitivities that you don’t realize. My friend had testing done and she can’t eat watermelon or fermented foods. You would think those are good for you but not her.

    • @andreirobas5748
      @andreirobas5748 Год назад

      Some studies have found ADHD people having elevated gluten specific antibodies. Once they eliminated gluten, their symptoms greatly improved. Recommend doing some research.